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Welcome to the Center for Information Technology and Society at UC Santa Barbara

CITS is a vibrant and effective network of scholars dedicated to interdisciplinary research and education that seeks to understand and help shape the complex development, use, and social effects of information technologies. We foster cutting edge research across engineering, social sciences, and humanities through dynamic connections with academia, industry, and government.

WHAT'S HAPPENING AT CITS?

We are pleased to announce the appointment of Professor Joseph Walther as the first Bertelsen Presidential Chair in Information Technology and Society. Professor Walther will assume both the directorship of UCSB’s Center for Information Technology and Society (CITS) and a distinguished professorship in the Department of Communication, beginning November, 2017. Walther is currently the Wee Kim Wee Professor of Communication and Information at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, Asia. He is also a fellow in social media research at the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany and a fellow at the Centre for the Study of Children and Media at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research.

Walther pioneered the systematic study of computer-mediated communication and its implications for interpersonal relationships. His original theories and empirical work have been applied to topics such as online impression formation, virtual team dynamics, social media and persuasion, digital deception, online learning, electronic dating systems, and the use of information technology to reduce prejudice among Jews and Arabs in the Middle East. This enduring and highly influential research agenda has garnered several prestigious awards including the International Communication Association’s Steven H. Chaffee Career Achievement Award (2013) and the National Communication Association’s Charles H. Woolbert Research Award given to an article that has stood the test of time and become a stimulus for new conceptualizations of communication phenomena (2002, 2009). Professor Walther is a Fellow of the International Communication Association.

The Bertelsen Presidential Chair in Information Technology & Society was created by UCSB supporters Mark and Susan Bertelsen who also contributed to the founding of CITS. Mr. Bertelsen is a senior partner in the Palo Alto law firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. He is also on the Dean’s Cabinet of UCSB’s College of Engineering, in addition to active participation at the UC Berkeley Law School and as a trustee of the UC Berkeley Foundation. Mr. Bertelsen’s involvement in major business transformations involving computing, software and media, telecommunications, etc., have sustained his ongoing interests in research into the societal impacts, both good and bad, of the Internet.

Professor Walther counts himself a long-time admirer of CITS and UCSB. “I’ve been aware, and envious, of UCSB’s immense intellectual leadership in a variety of disciplines, whose works I’ve studied since I was a student myself,” he said. “Since Bruce Bimber’s original vision and through a series of smart leaders, CITS has brought people together across the university to enrich each other’s perspectives and tackle emergent technology-related social issues in a way that no single perspective or discipline could do as well on its own.” Although CITS originally offered a gathering place for the relatively few researchers scattered among departments who had interests in technology and its social consequences, Walther observes, its role is evolving and developing as computation, information systems, and social media occupy more mainstream academic and societal concerns. “I see CITS faculty affiliates and students in position to be the academic ‘first responders’ to explore and evaluate the information technology controversies, complications, and opportunities that catch society’s attention--from the transformation of relationships, to changes in our fundamental social institutions and humanistic expression--using solid interdisciplinary thinking with innovative methodologies we share with each other” says Walther. “But we do it in reflective ways so that our research has enduring lessons and lasting value, and shows how technology features interact with our basic needs and social tendencies. Ironically, technology is an amazing laboratory to discover what it means to be human.”

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